Sunday 9 December 1666

(Lord’s day). Up, not to church, but to my chamber, and there begun to enter into this book my journall of September, which in the fire-time I could not enter here, but in loose papers. At noon dined, and then to my chamber all the afternoon and night, looking over and tearing and burning all the unnecessary letters, which I have had upon my file for four or five years backward, which I intend to do quite through all my papers, that I may have nothing by me but what is worth keeping, and fit to be seen, if I should miscarry. At this work till midnight, and then to supper and to bed.

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Minor entries today from our diarists. Apparently Evelyn did naught nor met superior persons of note while in London this trip. He seems to be accounting for his whereabouts. (Will his calendar be summoned by the House of Commons?)

Not so minor entree; notes for those that keep records of their activities, they should take notice, never keep incriminating evidence on anything that can be perused and used to thy detriment, like hard drives sorry papers, or any other magnetic materials, for the Tower doth await, if not that then, the wife with the rolling pin, or kitchen staff looking for a comfy position. Many an indiscretion has come to the surface for the vultures and other carrion to feast on and found on recording surfaces that were thought to have been hidden.

Quite an interval. One might conclude that Pepys's office was generally messy w/papers piled everywhere. IIRC he let his books pile for awhile before sorting them out (though I'm sure those took up too much space to let too long an interval pass).

Over a decade ago upper management pushed 'housekeeping'. After my initial is-this-what-they-get-paid-the-big-bucks-for I noticed there were some counter intuitive aspects to it. I still argue w/local management who tend to see little or no cost (and no fears of miscarry :) in keeping absolutely everything indefinitely.

In creating a Committee to frame a law, the House of Commons routinely names its members, its meeting-time, "And [ charges it ] to send for...such Persons, Papers, and Records, as they shall find necessary."

This is consistent with what Pepys [and methinks Evelyn] is attending to.

Records-retention and -discarding deadlines are matters of statute when some public agencies in the US (e.g., public universities) are concerned.

a1604 M. HANMER Chron. 186 in J. Ware Hist. Ireland (1633), [He] shortly after miscarried at Athlone, by the fall of a Turre

t. 1668 W. TEMPLE Let. to Charles II in Wks. (1731) II. 58 If we had miscarried, your Majesty had lost an honest diligent Captain and sixteen poor Seamen.

b. trans. To cause to perish or suffer harm or misfortune. Usu. in pass. Obs.c1440 ...1565 Act 8 Eliz. c. 13 §1 Divers Shyppes..have by the lacke of suche Markes of late yeres ben myscaried peryshed and lost in the Sea.

1655 LD. ORRERY Parthenissa IV. II. viii. 743 Learning that his first Embassadors..were miscarried, he employ'd others. 2. intr. To go wrong or astray; to do wrong, misbehave. Also refl. Now rare.c1390...a1706 J. EVELYN Mem. for my Grand-son (1926) 3 So many of my deare Children have ben taken away & miscaryed.

c. intr. Of a fetus: to be born too prematurely to survive; to fail to survive to the stage of viability. rare before 20th cent.1600 SHAKESPEARE Henry IV, Pt. 2 V. iv. 9 And the child I go with, do miscarry. 1600 SHAKESPEARE Henry IV, Pt. 2 V. iv. 15 But I pray God the fruite of her wombe miscarry

a. Of a plan, business, etc.: to go wrong; to fail; to come to nothing, prove abortive. {dag}Also trans. (in pass.): to cause (an enterprise) to fail (obs.).1589 G. PUTTENHAM Arte Eng. Poesie III. xxiii. 226 Ye may see how a word spoken vndecently, not knowing the phrase or proprietie of a language, maketh a whole matter many times miscarrie.

a1616 SHAKESPEARE Coriolanus (1623) I. i. 266 What miscarries Shall be the Generals fault. 1639 T. FULLER Hist. Holy Warre II. xlv. 105 When a great action miscarrieth, the blame must be laid on some. 1654 MARQ. ORMONDE in G. F. Warner Nicholas Papers (1892) II. 142 It is ordinary when a busines is miscaryed to blame the ways taken to effect it. 1726 SWIFT Gulliver II. IV. vii. 105 If they find their Project hath miscarried, they return home.

(BNC) 104 Ras Hailu planned to free him and to raise the north in his name. The plot, however, miscarried.

b. Of a person: to fail in one's purpose or object; to be unsuccessful. {dag}Also with of.1602

6. a. intr. Of a letter, etc.: to fail to reach its proper destination; to be delivered to the wrong recipient.1592 H. WOTTON Let. 3 Dec. in L. P. Smith Life & Lett. Sir H. Wotton (1907) I. 293 Upon doubt lest some have miscarried, I have in this included a post-cipher. 1623 SHAKESPEARE & J. FLETCHER Henry VIII III. ii. 30 The Cardinals Letters to the Pope miscarried, And came to th'eye o' th' King.

b. trans. (in pass.). To take or deliver (a letter, etc.) to the wrong destination. Obs.1651 in W. Fraser Douglas Bk. (1885) IV. 258, I perswad my self still my letters and my sisters have been miscaryed that you came not to us heer. 1665 J. STRYPE in H. Ellis Orig. Lett. Lit. Men (1843) 183, I..think my Tuesday letter was miscarried, because no Answer to it.

7. intr. Of plants, seeds, land, etc.: to be unfruitful or unproductive; to fail to produce growth. Now rare (arch. and poet. in later use).1598 SHAKESPEARE Loves Labours Lost IV. i. 111 My Lady goes to kill hornes, but if thou marrie, hang me by the necke, if horns that yeere miscarrie.

8. trans. In physical sense: to carry to destruction. Obs.1632 W. LITHGOW Totall Disc. Trav. VI. 262 If any of them had missed [his footing], his sliding downe had miscarried them both ouer the Rocke.

Methinks going to church to hear the KJV of the Bible read and expounded would have done a former Puritan sympathizer's ears and heart good -- what with all the "thee's" and "thou's", etc. -- all other things being equal,

Going to Church, was it not, a means of keeping everyone on the straight and narrow like a herd of wildebeest, to prevent them from falling down the crevices of sins, away from the weaknesses of human frailty, contaminated by pleasure that gave way to illnesses that failed to be cured.Of course England had all these deviant groups , the list is long, unlike the rest of Europe that expelled or detongued them, that is, alternative means of inter mingling of the various thoughts.